Ocnus.Net
Washington's Battle Over Israel's Birth
By Richard Holbrooke, Washington Post 7/5/08
May 8, 2008 - 10:39:09 AM
It led to the most serious disagreement President
Harry Truman ever had with his revered secretary of state, George C. Marshall
-- and with most of the foreign policy establishment. Twenty years ago, when I
was helping Clark Clifford write his memoirs, I reviewed the historical record
and interviewed all the living participants in that drama. The battle lines
drawn then resonate still.
The British planned to leave Palestine at midnight on May
14. At that moment, the Jewish Agency, led by David Ben-Gurion, would proclaim
the new (and still unnamed) Jewish state. The neighboring Arab states warned
that fighting, which had already begun, would erupt into full-scale war at that
moment.
The Jewish Agency proposed partitioning Palestine into two
parts -- one Jewish, one Arab. But the State and Defense departments backed the
British plan to turn Palestine over to the United Nations. In March, Truman
privately promised Chaim Weizmann, the future president of Israel, that he
would support partition -- only to learn the next day that the American
ambassador to the United Nations had voted for U.N. trusteeship. Enraged,
Truman wrote a private note on his calendar: "The State Dept. pulled the
rug from under me today. The first I know about it is what I read in the
newspapers! Isn't that hell? I'm now in the position of a liar and
double-crosser. I've never felt so low in my life. . . ."
Truman blamed "third and fourth level" State
Department officials -- especially the director of U.N. affairs, Dean Rusk, and
the agency's counselor, Charles Bohlen. But opposition really came from an even
more formidable group: the "wise men" who were simultaneously
creating the great Truman foreign policy of the late 1940s -- among them
Marshall, James V. Forrestal, George F. Kennan, Robert Lovett, John J. McCloy,
Paul Nitze and Dean Acheson. To overrule State would mean Truman taking on
Marshall, whom he regarded as "the greatest living American," a
daunting task for a very unpopular president.
Beneath the surface lay unspoken but real anti-Semitism on
the part of some (but not all) policymakers. The position of those opposing
recognition was simple -- oil, numbers and history. "There are thirty
million Arabs on one side and about 600,000 Jews on the other," Defense
Secretary Forrestal told Clifford. "Why don't you face up to the
realities?"
On May 12, Truman held a meeting in the Oval Office to
decide the issue. Marshall and his universally respected deputy, Robert Lovett,
made the case for delaying recognition -- and "delay" really meant
"deny." Truman asked his young aide, Clark Clifford, to present the
case for immediate recognition. When Clifford finished, Marshall,
uncharacteristically, exploded. "I don't even know why Clifford is here.
He is a domestic adviser, and this is a foreign policy matter. The only reason
Clifford is here is that he is pressing a political consideration."
Marshall then uttered what Clifford would later call
"the most remarkable threat I ever heard anyone make directly to a
President." In an unusual top-secret memorandum Marshall wrote for the
historical files after the meeting, the great general recorded his own words:
"I said bluntly that if the President were to follow Mr. Clifford's advice
and if in the elections I were to vote, I would vote against the
President."
After this stunning moment, the meeting adjourned in
disarray. In the next two days, Clifford looked for ways to get Marshall to
accept recognition. Lovett, although still opposed to recognition, finally
talked a reluctant Marshall into remaining silent if Truman acted. With only a
few hours left until midnight in Tel Aviv, Clifford told the Jewish Agency to
request immediate recognition of the new state, which still lacked a name.
Truman announced recognition at 6:11 p.m. on May 14
-- 11 minutes after Ben-Gurion's declaration of independence
in Tel Aviv. So rapidly was this done that in the official announcement, the
typed words "Jewish State" are crossed out, replaced in Clifford's
handwriting with "State of Israel." Thus the United States became the
first nation to recognize Israel, as Truman and Clifford wanted. The secret of
the Oval Office confrontation held for years, and a crisis in both domestic
politics and foreign policy was narrowly averted.
Clifford insisted to me and others in countless discussions
over the next 40 years that politics was not at the root of his position -- moral
conviction was. Noting sharp divisions within the American Jewish community --
the substantial anti-Zionist faction among leading Jews included the publishers
of both The Post and the New York Times -- Clifford had told Truman in his
famous 1947 blueprint for Truman's presidential campaign that "a continued
commitment to liberal political and economic policies" was the key to
Jewish support.
But to this day, many think that Marshall and Lovett were
right on the merits and that domestic politics was the real reason for Truman's
decision. Israel, they argue, has been nothing but trouble for the United
States.
I think this misses the point. Israel was going to come into
existence whether or not Washington recognized it. But without American support
from the very beginning, Israel's survival would have been at even greater
risk. Even if European Jewry had not just emerged from the horrors of World War
II, it would have been an unthinkable act of abandonment by the United States.
Truman's decision, although opposed by almost the entire foreign policy
establishment, was the right one -- and despite complicated consequences that
continue to this day, it is a decision all Americans should recognize and
admire.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008